Showing posts with label baby boomers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baby boomers. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Inspiration-Retire or Desire?

I found this story so exciting and cool. This 60 year old woman who never modeled before was discovered by Steven Meisel and launched a modeling career. I love stories of people reinveting themselves or following their dreams. What would you do if you could do anything? Are you already doing it?

It used to be that when people got to be 50 or 60 they were supposed to retire and fade into the background and let the young folks take over. That's just not true anymore. First of all most of us can't afford to. But also, who wants to sit around and fish all day? I don't. It's a human instinct to want to expand and contribute.

Maybe you feel you deserve to relax and take it easy after a certain age. I totally understand that, too. What do you think about the Golden Years? Retire or Follow Your Desire?





At the tender age of 60, Cindy Joseph is the new poster girl for boomers re-inventing themselves around the country’s fastest growing demographic. “For me a model was 18 years old, 18 feet tall and 18 pounds,” Cindy jokingly told me when I caught up with her working in her garden in Yonkers, just north of New York City.


Never a model in her youth, she is defying one of the most unforgiving age barriers of any profession by acting her age and throwing away the hair dye. “I’m so happy to be done with the insecurity of youth and know who I am, know what I want, know how to handle myself,” she told me between takes on a photo shoot with photographer Chuck Baker.

Her flowing gray hair and “discovery” by top fashion photographer Steven Meisel led to a contract with New York’s prestigious Ford Models. They’ve launched an entire division called “Classic” for accommodating the rush of advertising clients trying to catch the age wave and silver tsunami sweeping over the youth market. Seventy-eight million boomers control more that 70 percent of the country’s discretionary income, according to recent marketing surveys.
“Particularly with the economy we’ve experienced,” Paulete Ellson added while surrounded by headshots and fielding calls in Ford Models’ cavernous booking and operations room in New York City. She books only the “Classic” models like Cindy whose ranks have more than quadrupled the past 10 years as “gray” increasingly becomes the “new blonde.” According to the U.S. Census 2010 figures, nearly 10,000 Americans are turning 65 every day.

“It’s not about aspiring to youth anymore,” claims Cindy who is a head-turning example of why “gray” is increasingly becoming the “new blonde” for advertisers. “We’re people enjoying who we are and what we are. We’re enjoying our lives and so we’d like to see peers in ads.”
Cindy is leveraging her new found success into yet another new career in the cosmetics business. She is literally betting her modeling fees on a new line of organic cosmetics, appropriately called BOOM. She created them to enhance rather than cover up the more confident look she believes comes with age. “I thought wow, wouldn’t it be awesome to make a cosmetic line that was pro-age instead of anti-age.”

Granted, not many of Cindy’s contemporaries have the natural beauty to re-invent themselves as top models in New York, regardless of their age. What attracted me most to Cindy’s story for my Nextracks series about boomers re-inventing their lifestyles and careers, is how naturally it came about after she was “discovered” while emerging from a New York subway station and looking for work.

“The very day I cut off the last bit of hair dye I was using to hide my gray hair, I was approached by a casting agent in New York,” she told me while showing off her first magazine ad for Dolce & Gabbana.

She also shared with me how she didn’t have the self-confidence when she was in her twenties and thirties to deal with the rejection that is the more common outcome of the almost daily casting calls she has to go on.

“I go in and what you see is what you get,” she says sarcastically before starting to laugh at herself. “I tell them I’m happy with it. If you want it, I’ll sell it to you.”

From a four-story billboard in Times Square for Target to Oil of Olay magazine ads, more advertisers are buying Cindy’s look of experience and confidence. “If you look at the baby boomer generation, every single decade of our lives we have re-invented what’s gone on before. We’re not sitting on the front porch knitting and rocking ourselves away.”

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Inspiration-Redefining Beauty

Who are your role models? Who inspires you? I mean people living and thriving right now. Here are some of mine:




Yo, Helen Mirren on the BEACH, Biatch!

Meryl Streep
One of the most talented, beautiful and graceful actresses in Hollywood



Hair Inspiration!



That's right. Madonna. Love her. It's a Leo thing.

 Guess these are just the blondes. I'll have to do brunettes and redheads another time. My main female hero over 50 is my Mom (she wouldn't let me take a picture of her). She's also (fake) blonde. She's 73 and still scuba dives. My mom is incredibly youthful and loving and I  am inspired by her every day.

I found a very interesting article from a marketing company regarding the consumer power of Baby Boomer women. I think you'll be impressed.

Also, did you know there's a National Association of Baby Boomer Women? Here's the blog.

Feel good about yourself. You're important. You matter. You are beautiful. Thank you.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Full Disclosure

I am actually 49 but turning 50 next month. I have to admit it has been freaking me out. I was cool. I was a punk rocker in the 80's. I have always looked a good 10 years younger than my age. Until now. Suddenly I tell people my age and they believe me!!! It's horrible!

Early 1980's



Obviously I loved that outfit. ha ha.

Below is me at almost 40.


I am at the tail end of the Baby Boomers so I know I'm not the only one going through this. I am on a personal mission to make 50 my bitch. Ha ha. I would apologize for my language but, no. That is part of the privilege of getting older. I can stop worrying so much about what everyone thinks. I have earned that. (whew. That felt good, actually)

Here I am now. This is a professional headshot so keep that in mind. It's not retouched though. I had to stick my neck way out so I didn't have a double chin. It hurt kind of.


By the way, that is my real haircolor. I stopped dying it and let the premature gray (white) grow out. Letting the gray hang out is a noticeable trend that I'll talk about later. 

I'd love to hear your thoughts and concerns regarding this time of life regardless of your age or sex. I personally refuse to become a little old lady. I'm on a mission to stay hot and I'm not talking about menopause.